Liberty
Letters

April 26, 2005
John Adams #22
What Think
You of Terrorism, Mr. Jefferson?
by Steve Farrell
In Liberty
Letter 21 I promised to follow up on John
Adams' feelings regarding party spirit -- that it
was an impediment, a censor, a book-burner to the
truth; and then it gets ugly.
Put party before principle, before truth, before
thinking, before love of country, Adams argued,
then right on its heals comes its natural
companions: blind hatred, senseless violence, class
warfare, and civil war. It was just a matter of
time.
In this letter, Adams discusses the latter. His
target audience was "posterity, the present age,
and [Thomas Jefferson]," who Adams believed
was not as innocent as he claimed -- both he and
his party -- especially in the matter of letting
loose a party scoundrel, libeler, and seditionist
by the name of James Calendar, who brought much
evil upon Adams, his country, and by and by, Thomas
Jefferson. (1)
Jefferson denied the charge till death. So who
can say who was right as regards Calendar?
Nevertheless, Adams unloads in blunt, prophetic
fashion as to how bad party spirit got, and would
get if left unchecked.
Writes Adams:
- The sensations excited, in free yet firm
minds by the terrorism of the day." You say,
'none can conceive them who did not witness
them, and they were felt by one party
only.'
Not so, says Adams. Both parties were guilty:
- To collect and arrange the documents
illustrative of it, would require as many lives
as those of a cat.
There was plenty of evidence. 'Here, Mr.
Jefferson, here is a brief sample of what your
party of 'innocents' caused':
- You never felt the terrorism of Gallatin's
Insurrection in Pennsylvania. You certainly
never realized the terrorism of Frie's, most
outrageous riot and rescue, as I call it,
Treason, Rebellion as the World and great judges
and two juries pronounced it. You certainly
never felt the terrorism, excited by Genet, in
1793, when ten thousand people in the streets of
Philadelphia, day after day, threatened to drag
Washington out of his house, and effect a
revolution in the government, or compel it to
declare war in favor of the French Revolution,
and against England. The coolest and the firmest
minds, even among the Quakers in Philadelphia,
have given their opinions to me, that nothing
but the yellow fever, which removed Dr.
Hutchinson and Jonathan Dickenson Sargent from
this World, could have saved the United States
from a total revolution of government.
-
- I have no doubt you [were] fast
asleep in philosophical tranquility, when ten
thousand people, and perhaps many more, were
parading the streets of Philadelphia, on the
evening of my Fast Day; when even Governor
Mifflin himself, thought it his duty to order a
patrol of horse and foot to preserve the peace;
when Market Street was as full as men could
stand by one another, and even before my door;
when some of my domestics in frenzy, determined
to sacrifice their lives in my defense; when all
were ready to make a desperate salley among the
multitude, and others were with difficulty and
danger dragged back by the others; when I myself
judged it prudent and necessary to order chests
of arms from the War Office to be brought
through by lanes and back doors: determined to
defend my house at the expense of my life, and
the lives of the few, very few domestics and
friends within it.
-
- What think you of Terrorism, Mr. Jefferson?
Shall I investigate the causes, the motives, the
incentives of these terrorisms? Shall I remind
you of Phillip Freneau, of Loyd? Of Ned Church?
Of Peter Markoe? Of Andrew Brown? Of Duane? Of
Callender? Of Tom Paine? Of Greenleaf, of
Cheetham, of Tennison of New York? Of Benjamin
Austin of Boston? [Inflammatory writers and
party hacks]
-
- But above all; shall I request you, to
collect the circular letters from members of
Congress in the middle and southern states to
their constituents?
-
- The real terrors of both parties have always
been, and now are, the fear that they shall lose
the elections and consequently the loaves and
fishes; and that their antagonists will obtain
them. Both parties have excited artificial
terrors and if I were summoned as a witness to
say upon oath, which party had exited,
Machiavellialy, the most terror, and which had
really felt the most, I could not give a more
sincere answer, than in the vulgar style, 'Put
them in a bag and shake them, and then see which
comes out first.'
Adams prediction of where it was all headed, and
this was 1813: "The terror of a civil war, a La
Vendee [a reference to the French Revolution's
war of villages against towns, and particularly on
the middle class of the towns], a division of
the states, etc."
He could only "thank God that terror never
seized on my mind."
Adams was being honest. He never had a hand in
it. Can we say the same of ourselves? The Founders
came together for a miraculous revolution and the
writing of a marvelous Constitution, but once the
miracles were wrought, and the deeds done, the
Devil got to work, and former friends and fellow
patriots were now accused of being monarchists and
Tories on one side, anarchists and Jacobins (the
equivalent of communist conspirators) on the other
-- and yes, a half century later, we had a civil
war, and then another half century after that, the
beginnings of a socialism based class warfare, a
'La Vendee' that continues to our time.
What party has wrought! A selfish, mindless
crowd on both sides of the political aisle, who
daily sacrifice the Miracle of Philadelphia for a
bowl of party pottage. We can do better.
Footnote:
1. Jefferson pardoned the seditious Calendar,
along with several others, when he revoked the
Sedition Act. Then an ungrateful Calendar
immediately turned on his liberator, blackmailing
Jefferson for a job. Jefferson refused. Calendar
retaliated by inventing the Sally Hemmings story
(the black woman who supposedly fathered
Jefferson's child). John and Abigail Adams, who
knew Jefferson, and Hemmings, and Calendar, were
certain the story was a fraud, but kind of
snickered over it. The charge was so outrageous,
Jefferson never responded to it; and it died a
quick death until whipped up again by another
unprincipled party hack in our day.
Farrell
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